Roger Clyne and The Peacemakers

JUNE 20TH | The Cowan @ Topgolf Nashville

Doors: 7:00PM

GA: $15 advance / $20 day of showBalcony: $25 advance / $30 day of showBalcony Tickets are on the balcony of the venue with a private entrance and a private bar.Reserved Seating: $30 advance / $35 day of showReserved Seating tickets are on the balcony of the venue.

Bridging the gap between rock & roll, roadhouse Americana, and the music sound of the southwestern United States, Roger Clyne & The Peacemakers have carved their own path over 15 years. They’ve traveled the world, sent eight albums to the top of the Billboard Internet Sales Chart, launched an annual music festival in Mexico, started their own line of ultra premium tequila and built a global community of music-lovers and peacemakers – all while remaining 100% independent. The summer of 2017 promises another album, their 10th studio album in 20 years. Produced by Grammy winning legend Steve Berlin and mixed by Michael Brauer at the iconic Electric Ladyland, they shine new light on a band that’s built a career on trekking their own path with their own sound style of twang and taller-than-life characters of the Southwest to a rock & roll soundtrack. In April of 2017, the band's founders, Roger Clyne & PH Naffah, appear in a documentary about The Refreshments; the documentary celebrates the 20th Anniversary of the debut album, Fizzy Fuzzy Big & Buzzy.

Two decades after its release, the album continues to influence a wide range of rock and country musicians, 12 of whom have put their own stamp on the album’s music with an upcoming, all-star tribute album recreation of the iconic album. The band’s roots run deep, sinking back to a time with The Refreshments – the hometown heroes of Phoenix - during the mid-1990s. This was all fueled by a major-label deal with Mercury Records, a popular song (”Banditos”) on American rock radio and MTV, and the unique distinction of being both the composers and performers of the theme song for the culture favorite TV show "King of the Hill". These all served to introduce Roger Clyne’s songwriting to a national audience. The Refreshments sang about Mexico, liquored-up bandits and troubadours, mixing the lore of the American Southwest with guitar muscle and pop/rock melody. Clyne deepened that sound with The Peacemakers, a roots rock band relying not on a record label for support, but on near-constant touring and a rare, genuine connection with fans.